Jill Campbell MSN, FNP-C, CANS

Jill Campbell MSN, FNP-C, CANS

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Jill Campbell MSN, FNP-C, CANS, Health/Beauty, Houston, TX.

05/23/2026

I will do my best 😂

Photos from Jill Campbell MSN, FNP-C, CANS's post 05/22/2026

How do we “lift” the face with Botox?

Most people think Botox lifts by tightening or pulling the skin upward.

It doesn’t.

A lower face lift with neurotoxin is really about relaxing the muscles that pull downward.

By strategically treating the platysma bands, DAO muscles, and portions of the mandibular depressor complex, we can reduce downward tension and allow the natural elevators of the face to become more dominant.

The result can be:
• A softer jawline
• Less heaviness in the lower face
• Improved neck contour
• Reduced downward pull at the corners of the mouth
• A more refreshed appearance

The key is understanding anatomy. The goal is not to freeze the face. The goal is to create balance between the muscles that pull up and the muscles that pull down.

Small adjustments. Strategic placement. Natural-looking results.

Photos from Jill Campbell MSN, FNP-C, CANS's post 05/21/2026

Ozempic Butt is not simply fat loss. What many patients notice after significant GLP-1 weight loss is actually a combination of fat loss, muscle loss, collagen depletion, and skin laxity.

The glutes are particularly vulnerable because projection depends on all four.

When volume decreases rapidly, patients often notice:
• loss of upper glute fullness
• increased skin laxity
• more visible cellulite
• a flatter, less supported appearance

This is why adding volume alone is not always the answer.

The most successful treatment plans address tissue quality and structural support in addition to volume restoration.
Biostimulators such as SculptraÂŽ and RadiesseÂŽ can play an important role by stimulating collagen production, improving skin quality, and helping restore support to areas affected by significant weight loss.

The goal is not to create an oversized result.

The goal is to restore shape, support, and proportion.

05/20/2026

Jowls are rarely just a “jowl problem.”

Most of the time, the issue is loss of support surrounding the jowl — not simply heaviness in the area itself. Treating the jowl directly without addressing the surrounding structure can actually make the lower face look heavier or wider.

In this patient, filler was strategically placed in 4 key areas:
• Mid cheek — to help lift and support
• Lateral cheek — to restore upper facial structure
• Lateral jawline — to improve contour and transition
• Chin — to create anterior support and balance

By lifting up and back in the cheeks and jawline while bringing the chin slightly forward, we can soften the appearance of jowling and create a cleaner, more supported lower face.

The goal is never to “fill the jowl.”
It is to restore structure, support, and harmony.

05/18/2026

Hooded lids are not always a skin problem.

Sometimes they are a muscle balance problem.
A strategic brow lift with neurotoxin works by relaxing the muscles that pull the brows down — allowing the elevating muscles to work more effectively and create a subtle lift through the upper lid and brow.

The key is knowing exactly what to relax… and what NOT to relax.

In this video, Jill breaks down:
• The depressor muscles responsible for brow descent
• How medial vs lateral brow lift is created
• Why frontalis placement matters when treating hooded lids
• And why poor placement can actually make heaviness worse

This is not a substitute for an upper blepharoplasty in patients with significant skin laxity — but in the right patient, thoughtful neurotoxin placement can create a beautifully refreshed, more open appearance.

Individual anatomy, assessment, and placement matters.

Photos from Jill Campbell MSN, FNP-C, CANS's post 05/16/2026

The nose is one of the most technically nuanced areas to treat with neurotoxin — and tiny placement differences create completely different outcomes.

A slimmer appearance.
Reduced bunny lines.
Less nostril flare.
A subtle tip lift.
None of it happens by accident.

Every injection point serves a different purpose:
• Transverse nasalis → softens bunny lines + refines the bridge
• LLSAN → minimizes dynamic flare + gummy smile contribution
• Alar nasalis → reduces nostril widening on animation
• Dilator naris → decreases excessive flare
• Depressor septi nasi → lifts a droopy tip on smile

The key is understanding which muscle is actually creating the movement before injecting.

Not every patient needs every point.
And over-treating the nose can affect both expression and airflow.

This is why anatomy, assessment, and conservative placement matter.

Injector education matters. Experience matters. Precision matters.

05/14/2026

Hooded eyes are not always about “extra skin. Sometimes, they are about muscle balance.

When certain depressor muscles around the brow stay overactive, they pull the brows downward and inward over time — creating heaviness through the upper eyelid area.

Strategic neurotoxin placement can soften that downward pull and create a subtle, natural brow lift by relaxing:
• the depressor supercilii
• procerus
• corrugators
• lateral orbicularis oculi

The key is understanding which muscles create lift… and which ones create heaviness.

And just as importantly: knowing where not to inject.

If you place too much neurotoxin too low in the frontalis, you can accidentally worsen heaviness and drop the brows further. This is why assessment, anatomy, and placement matter so much when treating hooded lids.

A well-done brow lift with neurotoxin should look refreshed — not frozen.

Photos from Jill Campbell MSN, FNP-C, CANS's post 05/12/2026

Most people think a lip flip “didn’t work” because Botox does not work for them.

Usually, it comes down to placement.

The orbicularis oris is a circular muscle. Where you inject within that circle completely changes the outcome.

Inject too high into the body of the muscle and you can accidentally pull the lip downward, flatten the upper lip, or affect function.

But when placement is lower and more precise at the vermillion border, you relax the correct fibers while preserving the outer contraction that helps roll the lip outward.

Same treatment. Different anatomy knowledge. Completely different result.

05/08/2026

Not every gummy smile is caused by excess gum tissue. Often, it is muscular.

In many patients, the upper lip elevators are simply overactive and pull the lip too high when smiling. By strategically treating muscles like the LLSANs and orbicularis oris with small, superficial amounts of neurotoxin, we can soften that pull and create a more balanced smile.

In some cases, I will also combine treatment with lip filler to help support the upper lip and improve longevity, since gummy smile tox alone typically lasts closer to 6–8 weeks.

The key is understanding why the gummy smile is happening in the first place because not every patient should be treated the same way.

05/06/2026

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